House V. NCAA settlement doesn't settle everything
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AD Ross Bjork said Ohio State will not cut any sports teams but $18 million will be shared between football, basketball and volleyball.
Ohio State athletic director Ross Bjork said athletes playing for four varsity sports teams will receive direct payments in the next school year.
Over the past five years, college athletics has undergone a massive transformation, shifting from amateur ideals to a new era defined by athlete empowerment, NIL deals, and legal reckonings. On Friday,
Ohio State AD Ross Bjork has been in favor of changes to the college football calendar. However, it's unclear when those moves are coming.
Ohio State University is now allowed to pay its student athletes. Around $18 million will go toward paying the athletes for their name, image and likeness. Ohio State’s Athletic Director Ross Bjork announced that the money will pay athletes playing for the school's football,
Ohio State's athletic department is teaming up with Learfield to launch a groundbreaking initiative designed to enhance NIL opportunities. Will other schools follow suit?
College walk-on athletes are as much a part of the teams as scholarship members, but a reduction in roster size puts their existence in jeopardy.
A seismic shift in the college sports landscape is underway following the final approval of a landmark settlement of three antitrust lawsuits against the NCAA ... sports at Ohio State are due ...
Name, image and likeness will have a new look at Ohio State. Just days after the landmark House v. NCAA court settlement was approved, allowing colleges to share revenue directly with athletes, Ohio State’s department of athletics and its partner,